Friendship with Chvez a necessary evil for Portugals Scrates

10th October 2011, 0 comments

Wikileaks cables show how his relationship with Chvez left Scrates concerned both at relations with Washington and the well-being of the Portuguese community in Venezuela.

Former Portuguese Prime Minister Jos Scrates found himself in a diplomatic quandary when Washington started pressuring him to take a tougher line onHugo Chvez when the Venezuelan leader visited Lisbon.

A series of US embassy cables from 2006 released recently by Wikileaks show how the US government had pushed the Scrates government on numerous occasions to be more vocal over Chvezs human rights record. But US diplomats in Lisbon expressed their frustration over Portugals hesitancy to take a lead in diplomatic initiatives against the Chvez government because the Scrates government feared repercussions against the large Portuguese community in Venezuela.

Scrates saw Chvezs visit in October 2006 as a necessary evil rather than a welcome enhancement of relations, according to US Ambassador Alfred Hoffman.

In one confidential missive, dated June 23, 2006, Foreign Minister Luis Amado told the US Embassy that Portugal would treat Venezuela very carefully unless provoked.

The following July, after Chvez made a refuelling stopover at Lisbon airport, Hoffman met with Amado to get a readout of Scrates brief meeting with the Venezuelan leader. Chvez was returning home after a controversial tour to Belarus, Iran and Russia, where he signed a series of arms deal.

According to Amado, Scrates had learned just days before that Chvez would be in Lisbon and wanted to meet with him. The Portuguese prime minister, who felt obligated to meet with him, asked Amado to give the US Embassy a heads-up because he expected the meeting would be viewed with suspicion in Washington. But Amado told the ambassador that he completely forgot to alert him.

The foreign minister told US diplomats that Scrates delivered some tough messages… on the importance of regional stability and political dialogue. The prime minister also offered to help mediate any problems Chvez had with Washington but the Venezuelan president declined, saying that other countries had tried before but the differences with the United States were not so easy to resolve, reads the July 28, 2006 cable.

Amado told the US ambassador that we definitely need to deal with this personality very carefully. The main concern for Lisbon was the estimated 600,000 Portuguese nationals who live in Venezuela. Thousands of Spaniards, Portuguese and Italians emigrated to Venezuela under an offer made by former dictator Marcos Prez Jimnez 1952-1958 who enticed the post-war Europeans with work in public projects.

Amado told the US ambassador that he believed Chvez was “a smart guy, populist, and emotional, but I don’t see him as irrational.” Nevertheless the Portuguese foreign minister said that someone from our side has to talk to him from time to time; he needs to hear messages from those who think like we think. Otherwise, Amado cautioned, he would develop a skewed perception of reality if he only has contact with people like Lukashenko and Ahmadinejad.”

Chvezs threat to regional stability

We have had many discussions with senior Portugueseofficials about Venezuela, and it is clear they share our concerns about his domestic policies and the threat he poses to regional stability, Ambassador Hoffman told his superiors in Washington.

Nevertheless, Portugal, according to the ambassador, was very quietly telling its former African colonies to support Guatemala, instead of Venezuela in the elections for a UN Security Council seat but it is very nervous about the potential impact of that decision on its citizens in Venezuela.

In October, Chvez made an official visit to Portugal, which again was met with uneasiness by the Scrates government. Foreign Ministrys Latin American Affairs Director Helena Coutinho told the US Embassy that Chvezs visit could be “a tough one” but again it was allowing him to come in the interest of protecting the well-being of Portuguese citizens in Venezuela.

Chvez had been pressuring for a meeting since 2005 but then-President Jorge Sampaio denied the requests due to Portugal’s annoyance over the house arrest in Caracas of a Portuguese pilot accused of drug trafficking, the embassy wrote in August 8, 2006, quoting Coutinho. Sampaio pulled Chvez aside at an Ibero-American summit and pressed him to release the pilot. Relations improved again when the pilot was finally released.